I'm doing various experiments whit electrolysis, and as I don't have graphite electrodes, the metal in my electrodes goes into the reaction.
At least that's what I think.
I've tried Fe, Cu and Al electrodes.
I started using NaCl dissolved in wather, and got that eerie Cl smell during the process.
Then, I ran out of NaCl, and decided to try something else.
I have a 25lbs bag of KNO3 sitting in the basement, and I went down there and grabbed a cup of the stuff, and dissolved it in hot wather.
As you might know... When it was dissolved, the water wsn't very hot anymore...
Anyhow... KNO3 seems to work about the same as NaCl, only it doesn't give of any Cl smell.
I saw somewhere that electrolysis of KNO3 would not break up the KNO3 at all, but rather break up the H2O.
When looking at it from a "pure" electrolysis perspective, the result should be H2 and O2 gas, wich bubbles from the electrodes.
When using metallic electrodes, the electrodes are eroded, and goes into solution as "gunk".
Fe electrodes = Brown gunk (Rust, I think)
Cu electrodes = Green/black gunk (CuO ??)
Al electrodes = White/gray gunk (Al2O3 ????)
What I'm curious about is two things:
Are my assumptions correct regarding the "gunk" or does the KNO3 plays trics on me, forming weird potassium compounds or nitrates or other weirdness, or does the KNO3 stay intact?
Are my gunk "pure" metal oxides, and if they are; How can I extract it from the KNO3 solution? The gunk is heavier then the solution, so it settles in the lower third of my container, so I guess I could decant it and put back clean wather over and over again for like... a month, but that's not very practical.
Please speak your mind, cause I'm almost clueless about what I'm doing here
-DX-